are there any actually 'scientific' tests out there evaluating the sound of Sozo vs Mallory vs whatever caps of the same value, with recordings posted?? i put 'scientific' in quotes because at the end of the process, it's still just your subjective ear evaluating the recordings... but that's even more reason why the process needs to be as clinical as possible for the results to have any significance at all. there's tons of youtube videos and threads about this, but all of them i've been able to find fall short of meeting all the following criteria, which i think are necessary to prove that any differences heard aren't due to other factors:
- capacitance must be actually MEASURED and verified to match within a tight tolerance between caps being swapped out, so that the 'differences' between 22nF's from different manufacturers aren't just because one's an 18nF and the other is a 27nF... stunning to me that i haven't been able to find a single test (with accessible recordings) that mentions doing this
- recordings must be taken from the SAME AMP, not 'two identical amps' as then other component tolerances could easily create the difference
- recordings must use the SAME EXACT INPUT, if someone's a really tight player and can produce studio identical takes of the same exact riff then that's passable, but ideally re-amping would be used so the signal is actually identical
additional criteria which aren't as strictly necessary, but i think would help ensure the results are significant and easily analyzed by ear:
- riffs should be short in length (around 5 sec ideal, no longer than 10 sec), and different riffs should use as many different styles and pickup types/positions as possible
- for comparison, recordings from different manufacturers should be randomized with the key hidden from the evaluator, and played directly back to back with no gaps in between
- tube amps only... if there are differences, they might reveal themselves in a guitar, but they should be more pronounced with much larger signal swings and DC voltages, so a tube amp would be the best method to evaluate whether differences truly exist
- coupling caps only for max DC drop and AC swing, see previous point
- ideally all the coupling caps in the amp would be replaced at once
i feel like anyone willing and able to go through the trouble to set up a test like this properly, doesn't, because they already know they're not going to find any difference, and value their time and money more than that. i'm all but convinced there's no difference, but i am immensely curious and very willing to be proven wrong, so i'd do it if i had the opportunity... but buying an entire amp's worth of fancy caps from multiple manufacturers just isn't in the cards for me haha.